F.R. Rodriguez wrote for Nomadx News. Posted at 06:00 on January 9, 2022
Artificial intelligence is a rapidly evolving field. These days, it can defeat professional chess players and video game teams, to name a few examples. Not only can it now generate text with incredible accuracy, but it can also translate natural language descriptions into lifelike images. Some firms, including Open AI with DALL-E 2 and Google with Imagen, have built state-of-the-art systems that produce incredible photos. Although we choose DALL-E 2 as our primary example in this article, our conclusions hold for any other A. I system that generates images.
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OpenAI, an artificial intelligence research group that Microsoft and Elon Musk co-founded, developed the DALL-E system. It's a neural network that interprets messages, connects them to different visual concepts, and generates images using GPT-3 as its foundation. There are times when the results are close enough to real photos.
DALL-E is made possible by the 12 billion parameters of GPT-3, the third-generation autoregressive language model based on deep learning that was released in May 2020. This artificial intelligence application integrates multiple concepts related to different idioms. One of DALLE 2's most amazing skills is his ability to create things that don't even exist.
DALL-E's artificial intelligence fulfills requests made of it. Don't put too much pressure on yourself to devise a sensible solution. The system can combine concepts to create entirely new ones. Asking to see a panda bear on a spaceship, for example, will become command. This animal brought on a ship is something you'll discover via DALL-E's artificial intelligence. You will also receive several photos so you may choose the one you like most.
It seems that this technology brings up issues related to philosophy and aesthetics. We're curious to see how DALL-E alters our understanding of visual art. To begin answering this topic, let's consider the history of photography's invention.
Photography was not considered an art form in the beginning. Although the public instantly embraced it, many saw it as a mechanical method of capturing life's fleeting moments. It was more of a technical talent than art.
But it changed our understanding of how we engage with art. It relieved painters of the need to capture reality exactly as it was. They were free to explore the vast latent space that art provides. To express feelings that photos could not portray, they began to create abstract ideas. They broke with tradition, pushed the envelope of what was practical, and found solutions to problems that were specific to humans.
Photography made it possible to record a moment of reality in minutes as opposed to days, and it also made painting more accessible to all. Furthermore, at least in the view of the elites, it lessened the unique talent-based beauty of hand-painted masterpieces. Even when there are unhappy people, technology always finds a way.